The first graduates were
Mary Emma Woolley and Anne Tillinghast Weeden in 1894. In early graduation
programs, the names of the female graduates were listed in a special section below those of men. This list is in alphabetical order, by surname. •
Leah B. Allen (A.B. 1907) – Professor of Astronomy,
Wellesley College,
Hood College • Elinor B. Bachrach (A.B. 1965) – Senior Fiscal Advisor,
United States Agency for International Development (USAID) •
Charlotta Bass (did not graduate) – educator and
civil rights activist known as the editor and publisher of the
California Eagle. She was the first African-American woman nominated for one of the nation's two highest offices when she accepted the
Progressive Party's nomination for
vice president in the
1952 presidential election. •
Haiganush R. Bedrosian (A.B. 1965) – Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Family Court (2010–2016) •
Susan Bennett (A.B. 1971) – voice actress best known as the original American voice of
Apple Inc.'s
Siri •
Dana Buchman Farber (A.B. 1973) – fashion designer and activist •
Susan Cheever (A.B. 1965) –
PEN New England Award-winning author and columnist •
Kitty Chen (A.B. 1966) – playwright and actress •
Lyn Crost (A.B 1938) –
World War II correspondent and author •
Alice Drummond (A.B. 1950) –
Tony Award-nominated actress •
Katherine G. Farley (A.B. 1971) – Chairwoman,
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (2010–present) •
Kathryn S. Fuller (A.B. 1967) – Chair,
The Ford Foundation (2004–2010) •
Laura Geller (A.B. 1971) – Senior Rabbi Emerita,
Temple Emanuel •
Lillian Moller Gilbreth (Ph.D. 1915) – psychologist, industrial engineer, consultant, and educator •
Robin Green (A.B. 1967) –
Primetime Emmy Award-winning writer and producer •
Penelope Hartland-Thunberg (A.B. 1940, PhD Hon.'66) – Member of the
United States Tariff Commission (1965–1969);
Federal Woman's Award recipient •
Marianne Hirsch (A.B. 1970, Ph.D. 1975) – William Peterfield Trent Professor of English and Comparative Literature,
Columbia University; Professor, Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality •
Constance Hunting (A.B. 1947) – poet and publisher •
Ruth Hussey (A.B. 1936) –
Academy Award-nominated actress best known for her performance in
The Philadelphia Story •
Judith Jacobson (A.B. 1964) – Associate Professor of Clinical Epidemiology,
Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health •
Helen Johns (A.B. 1936) – retired competition swimmer, Olympic gold medalist, and former world record-holder •
Martha Sharp Joukowsky (A.B. 1958) – Professor of Archaeology, Brown University; co-founder, Brown's
Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World; President,
Archaeological Institute of America (1989–1993) •
Lois Lowry (1958, LITTD '14Hon) –
Newbery Medal-winning author best known for
The Giver • Linda Mason Aminoff (A.B. 1964) –
Emmy Award-winning producer; Senior Vice President,
CBS News (2005–2013) • Martha K. Matzke (A.B. 1966) – co-founder and former executive editor,
Education Week •
Emily Arnold McCully (A.B. 1961, LITTD 2002Hon) –
Caldecott Medal-winning children's author and illustrator best known for
Mirette on the High Wire • Kristie Miller (A.B. 1966) – author of books on women and politics best known for
C-SPAN's television series
First Ladies: Influence & Image • Catharine Theimer Nepomnyashchy (A.B. 1973, A.M. 1973) – Chair,
Barnard College Slavic Department •
Albina Osipowich (A.B. 1933) – retired competition swimmer, Olympic gold medalist, and former world record-holder •
Maureen Paley (A.B. 1975) – contemporary art gallery owner • Jane Pincus (A.B. 1959) – author best known for
Our Bodies, Ourselves •
Eliza Greene Metcalf Radeke (A.B. 1914) – President,
Rhode Island School of Design (1913–1931) •
Vicki Robin (A.B. 1967) – author best known for
Your Money or Your Life •
Marilynne Robinson (A.B. 1966) –
Pulitzer Prize-winning author •
Susan Salms-Moss (A.B. 1967) – opera soprano singer and translator •
Martha Sharp-Cogan (A.B. 1926) – humanitarian who, together with her first husband
Waitstill Sharp, was
one of only five Americans named
Righteous Among the Nations by
Yad Vashem for helping hundreds of Jews escape
the Holocaust •
Leah Sprague (A.B. 1966) – Judge of the Newburyport Massachusetts District Court • Wendy Strothman (A.B. 1972, LHD 2008) – former publisher at
Beacon Press and
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt • Anna Canada Swain (A.B. 1911) – christian missionary and author known as Brown's first female trustee •
Gwyneth Walker (A.B. 1968) – composer and music educator •
Betsy West (A.B. 1973) – video journalist and
Primetime Emmy Award-winning filmmaker; Senior Vice President,
CBS News (1998–2005) •
JoBeth Williams (A.B. 1970) – actress and
Academy Award-nominated filmmaker •
Mary Emma Woolley (A.B. 1894, M.A. 1895) – educator, peace and women's
suffrage activist; President,
Mount Holyoke College (1900–1937) •
Janet Yellen (A.B. 1967) – 78th
U.S. Secretary of the Treasury (2021–2025); 15th
Chair of the Federal Reserve (2014–2018); 18th Chair of the
Council of Economic Advisers (1997–1999) File:Portrait of Charlotta Bass, Providence ( ), ca. 1901-1910 (scl-mss064-0451~1) retouched (cropped).jpg|
Charlotta Bass (attended, did not graduate) File:Mary Emma Woolley (1863-1947).png|
Mary Emma Woolley 1894 File:Lois Lowry 2016.jpg|
Lois Lowry '58 File:Secretary Janet Yellen portrait (cropped).jpg|
Janet Yellen '67 File:Marianne Hirsch and Bella Brodzki (cropped, Hirsch).jpg|
Marianne Hirsch '70 ==References==